Do Dogs Know Who Is “Bad”? Science Explains

Dogs read human body language and signs of aggression or fear that we often miss. Growing up in a Sarplaninac kennel, I saw how our champions react to people before a single word is spoken.

Science now explains this behavior: experiments show that dogs stop trusting a person after being deceived just once.

This explains how instinct works and why they never forget a face they don’t trust.

Kyoto University: How Canine Judgment Works

Research from Kyoto University confirms that dogs judge people based on consistent actions, not just the food provided.

Akiko Takaoka led a study proving they have a long memory for deception. When a person lies, the dog stops cooperating immediately. Instead of forgetting the mistake, it stores that interaction and refuses to follow a liar’s lead. [1]

This shows that our companion isn’t just reacting to a single moment; it is constantly evaluating human character through behavior.

While humans often overlook red flags, their survival instinct is tuned to spot a person who isn’t genuine.

Dogs don’t need words to know when someone is hiding true intentions – they see it in the way that person moves and reacts.

Trust

In the first phase of the Kyoto study, a researcher pointed to a container hidden with food.

After the dog successfully found the reward, the person changed tactics and pointed to an empty container.

By the third round, when the same individual pointed to a bowl with food again, the dog refused to react. It didn’t forget the previous deception and simply disqualified the liar as a reliable lead.

Loyalty

A separate study focused on how dogs monitor interactions between people. During this test, an owner struggled to open a container and asked a stranger for help.

One volunteer assisted, while another rudely turned away. When both people later offered a treat, the dog consistently rejected food from the individual who had been unhelpful to its owner.

This behavior confirms that the canine survival instinct prioritizes social character over a quick snack. [2]

Conclusion

Science explains the “what,” but 36 years of breeding Sarplaninac dogs shows the “how” in real-time.

Most of our dogs remain calm during a normal conversation with a stranger who shows no red flags.

However, we had a female (Astra FCI 4302) who consistently barked at one particular neighbor, even though he gave no obvious reason for it. We often wondered: did she pick up on his hidden fear, excessive sweating, or did she simply judge him as a bad person?

These studies from Kyoto University confirm that her reaction wasn’t random.

Thank you for taking the time to read this post!

Sources:
  1. Do dogs follow behavioral cues from an unreliable human? (more information);
  2. Brojni eksperimenti su pokazali: Psi znaju da prepoznaju loše ljude i da ih upamte (more information).
Alen Stefanovic
Alen Stefanovic

Hello! I'm Alen Stefanovic, founder and writer for AwesomeSarplaninac.com.

I grew up with Šarplaninac dogs, learning everything from my father, who has been a breeder since 1990. This hands-on experience provides the foundation for all the knowledge I share.

My primary role here is to provide you with unique, firsthand information. On this site, you will find comprehensive resources covering Šarplaninac ownership, providing valuable care and training insights applicable to puppies and dogs in general.

Thank you for visiting! I am dedicated to providing the most honest and reliable information possible.

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